Spaceport America Wants $2 Million More From Taxpayers For Its Space Tourism Fantasy

If you build it, the space tourists will come
. That was the promise to the taxpayers of New Mexico back in 2009 when Spaceport America broke ground. Seven years and roughly $220 million later, New Mexico has little to show for it. And now the private space facility is asking for
even more money
.

New Mexico is one of the poorest states
in the country
. So it's easy to see why state legislators wanted to attract new jobs and businesses. Lawmakers were promised that if they helped finance a new spaceport in the middle of the desert, they'd attract millions of dollars in the burgeoning field of space tourism.

Unfortunately, Spaceport America and billionaire business tycoon Richard Branson's Virgin Galactic have not produced the boon in jobs and money that they promised. And to top it all off, the facility has just asked for another $2.35 million from cash-strapped New Mexico. It may not seem like a lot, but for the one of the poorest states in the nation in which a staggering 22 percent of residents live in poverty, it's throwing good money after bad.

In the past few years, the spaceport has gotten about $462,000 annually from the Legislature to help fund operations. Gov. Susana Martinez's proposed $6.5 billion budget asks for the same annual outlay for the spaceport plus an additional, non-recurring $2.35 million "for operating costs due to a shortfall in revenue from other sources."

Right now, Virgin Galactic, the only active tenant in the facility, pays just $1 million per year to lease the Spaceport. They started paying in 2013, and their bill will increase to $3 million in 2018. But that pales in comparison to the money that has already been shelled out, and continues to be
shelled out
, by the state.

After Virgin Galactic's tragic failure in 2014, when SpaceShipTwo exploded and
killed one pilot
, the people of New Mexico became even more pessimistic that space tourism would flourish in their state. Lawmakers are getting desperate to see their investment pay off. One idea for the Spaceport is to have it function as more of an entertainment or conference center. But that require more legislation to let Spaceport America do whatever it wants.

Sen. John Arthur Smith, D-Deming, has introduced Senate Bill 147 at the spaceport's behest to provide the facility with a governmental liquor license like the ones universities and some museums have, ostensibly to polish the facility's credentials as an event location.

Virgin Galactic is actively trying to get a Spaceport
built in the UK
. Given space tourism's track record in New Mexico, we might humbly suggest to our British friends that they make the billionaires pay for it themselves.